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@mikeal
Created April 27, 2012 00:11
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Date parsing JSON
JSON._dateReviver = function (k,v) {
if (v.length !== 24 || typeof v !== 'string') return v
try {return new Date(v)}
catch(e) {return v}
}
JSON.parseWithDates = function (obj) {
return JSON.parse(obj, JSON._dateReviver);
}
@visnup
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visnup commented Apr 27, 2012

@polotek, good point though.

@mikeal
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mikeal commented Apr 27, 2012

what i was trying to say was, if you override it globally and then use someone else's library which internally uses JSON.parse they will get results they are not expecting, which would be very bad. if you want it to be this way in your code just always use this JSON function but don't override the global.

@polotek
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polotek commented Apr 27, 2012

How's this?

JSON._dateReviver = function (k,v) {
  if (v.length !== 24 || typeof v !== 'string') return v
  try {return new Date(v)} 
  catch(e) {return v}
}

JSON.parseWithDates = function (obj) {
  return JSON.parse(obj, JSON._dateReviver);
}

@mikeal
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mikeal commented Apr 27, 2012

stealing.

@max-mapper
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i'd use JSON.dateyParse or JSON.timeyParse or something fun like that. think rachel ray: yummo! sammies!

@yocontra
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JSON.dateParsely fits standard naming convention

@visnup
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visnup commented Apr 27, 2012 via email

@mark-hahn
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How about dateify? I've always thought stringify was weird so why not keep up the tradition?

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